Don't let today's title fool you! Although I am deeply grateful for the work done on the New Standards for Classical Language Learning (which you can check out on the ACL's page here), our topic today is more of a construction project.
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Here's what you will need to make your own:
- A wooden yard stick
- packing/moving tape
- the front flap of a 3-ring binder
- N.B. - you will specifically need the kind that has a plastic film around the outside which creates a pocket on the front of the flap
- my teaching partner and I collect student binders at the end of the year to reuse them for ourselves, so all my standards are made from binder flaps that would otherwise have been trash!
- scissors/box cutter
- an large, old cardboard box (optional)
- I use this as a workstation to protect myself and the floor from the box cutter and the packing tape
Here's the construction process:
1. First, center the yardstick on the back of the binder flap, ensuring that the top of the stick is flush with the top of the flap.
2. Now attach the stick to the flap using a serious amount of tape. First, tape vertically along the sides of the yardstick, trying to keep the tape flush with the sides of the yardstick.
3. Next, tape in rows, starting from the top, and maximize the surface area in contact with the tape.
5. Test your standard by holding it in the air, waving it, trying to wiggle the binder flap. Drop it in an accidental way to make sure it is sturdy.
6. Slide a printout or something into the front pocket of the binder flap so it is visibile when the standard is displayed. Now it is ready to use!
And a final note - once you start making these, your students will want more of them.
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We store our standards in a 'milk crate' with file slots. |
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